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Shloka 21

Varaha-Pradurbhava Context: Prahlada’s Bhakti, Narasimha’s Ugra-Form, and Shiva’s Sharabha Intervention

तं तुष्टुवुः सुरश्रेष्ठा लोका लोकाचले स्थिताः सब्रह्मकाः ससाध्याश् च सयमाः समरुद्गणाः

taṃ tuṣṭuvuḥ suraśreṣṭhā lokā lokācale sthitāḥ sabrahmakāḥ sasādhyāś ca sayamāḥ samarudgaṇāḥ

Para dewa yang paling utama memuji-Nya; dan segala dunia yang bersemayam di Lokācala—bersama Brahmā, para Sādhya, Yama, serta rombongan Marut—mempersembahkan kidung pujian. Demikianlah seluruh tatanan kosmik mengakui Pati Yang Mahatinggi, Tuhan yang seorang diri meleraikan pāśa (ikatan) bagi paśu (jiwa).

tamHim (that Supreme Lord)
tam:
tuṣṭuvuḥpraised, extolled
tuṣṭuvuḥ:
sura-śreṣṭhāḥthe best among the devas
sura-śreṣṭhāḥ:
lokāḥthe worlds/realms
lokāḥ:
lokācalein/at Lokācala (the cosmic mountain/abode)
lokācale:
sthitāḥsituated, abiding
sthitāḥ:
sa-brahmakāḥtogether with Brahmā
sa-brahmakāḥ:
sa-sādhyāḥtogether with the Sādhyas (a class of celestial beings)
sa-sādhyāḥ:
caand
ca:
sa-yamāḥtogether with Yama
sa-yamāḥ:
sa-marut-gaṇāḥtogether with the groups/hosts of the Maruts (storm-deities).
sa-marut-gaṇāḥ:

Suta Goswami (narrating to the sages of Naimisharanya)

B
Brahma
S
Sadhyas
Y
Yama
M
Maruts

FAQs

It shows that even the highest cosmic authorities—Brahmā and the devas—respond to the Supreme Lord with stuti (hymnic praise), implying that Linga-oriented worship is not merely personal devotion but a universal, cosmic act of acknowledging Pati.

By depicting all worlds and divine orders praising Him, the verse frames Shiva-tattva as sovereign and all-pervading—the Supreme Pati recognized across realms, beyond limited deva-status, as the ultimate refuge and ruler.

Stuti (recitation of praise) is highlighted as a core devotional discipline that supports Pashupata orientation—turning the pashu’s attention toward Pati—often paired in practice with japa, dhyana, and Linga-puja.